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I accused my son of watching extreme porn on our family laptop… but was left sickened when I found out who it really was

A woman looks shocked while holding a laptop, with a "Dear Deidre After Dark" logo in the corner.
Illustration of "Dear Deidre After Dark" text with hands pulling back a curtain.

DEAR DEIDRE: OPENING our family laptop to be confronted with a line up of barely legal naked women gave me the shock of my life.

But my son’s reaction when I demanded to know why he thought it was acceptable to look at such filth on the shared computer, was even more concerning.

Incensed at my discovery, I thundered up to my son’s bedroom, accusing him as soon as I walked through the door.

He’s my only child, 17, and I soon regretted my reaction when it became clear he was completely confused.

He swore to me he had never looked at porn on our laptop and almost at the same time we both realised who had.

I’m 49 and live with my son and second husband, who is 52.

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I went back downstairs and looked over the browser history.

There was a very clear pattern; most nights immediately after my son and I had gone to bed, my husband logged on to adult sites for 20 minutes or so. 

It was bad enough when I thought it was my teenage son, but far worse realising my husband who has two daughters in their early 20s was looking at teenage porn.

These women were over 16, but only just.

He is definitely old enough to be their dad. It’s humiliating and unsettling.

Suddenly, our waning sex life made sense. For the past year he hadn’t come anywhere near me. 

When I had it out with my husband he did seem ashamed and very embarrassed.

He’s promised he won’t do it again, but I’m worried he’ll just get better at covering his tracks.

My son is now refusing to talk to him and there is an awful atmosphere in the house.

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DEIDRE SAYS: You’re understandably upset by this discovery and your son is deeply unsettled.

Unfortunately, there are plenty of relationships that are affected by the compulsive use of pornography.

Many adults, mostly male, have become over-reliant on pornography which blunts their appetite for intimacy with their real life partner and can increasingly lead them down more and more extreme paths.

Afterall, porn sites make their money by serving up increasingly niche and spicy content, to the point where users are compelled to pay for that particular blend of adult content.

First and foremost, it’s important to work out if your husband genuinely wants to kick this habit, which very much sounds like a porn addiction.

If he does, and is committed to rebuilding the trust in your relationship, you have a chance. 

Ask him to get in touch with Pivotal Recovery (www.pivotalrecovery.org) who offer a recovery programme and free introductory course called Pivotal Foundations.  

It’s important to apologise to your son for accusing him and also for your husband to open up about his struggles with porn. 

If he can also show your son he regrets his behaviour and is determined to change, your son is more likely to give him another chance.

Your son might want to talk to someone completely unconnected with your family and The Mix (themix.org.uk) offer a free mental health text and counselling service. 

It may also be worth considering family counselling to help you all move forward. 

My support pack How Counselling Works, explains more.

Dear Deidre’s Porn Problems

From hidden habits to broken trust, pornography problems frequently appear in Deidre’s inbox.

One man admitted his porn use had escalated to disturbing extremes, leaving him worried it might prevent him from having a loving sexual relationship.

Another reader shared that his fiancée ended their decade-long relationship because of his compulsive porn habits. 

And a third woman discovered her husband secretly watching porn in bed, leaving her feeling betrayed and unsure how to restore intimacy in their marriage.

THE SLIPPERY SLOPE OF ONLINE PORN

Pornography platforms are designed to keep viewers engaged, often using algorithms that predict what users will click next.

While most content is legal, the system can inadvertently push people toward more extreme material over time.

The hook

  • Recommendation algorithms: Sites track viewing history and suggest increasingly specific niches to keep attention.
  • Clicks and watch time: The longer someone watches, the more extreme or unusual content the algorithm may surface to maintain engagement.
  • Psychological reward loops: Novelty triggers dopamine release, creating a cycle where users seek “new” or more stimulating material.

Escalation path

  • Many viewers start with standard adult content.
  • Algorithms and repeated exposure can nudge users toward increasingly specific or extreme niches, including:
    • “Teen” or “barely legal” categories (still 18+ but fetishising youth)
    • Fetishised sexual acts such as BDSM, domination, or role play scenarios
    • Group sex, non-monogamy, or polyamory-themed content
    • Violent or aggressive sexual content (simulated assault, rough sex, humiliation)
    • Incest-themed or taboo role play scenarios
  • On poorly moderated or peer-to-peer platforms, users may even unintentionally encounter illegal content, including child sexual abuse material.
  • Over time, this escalation can desensitise users to more extreme acts, normalising fantasies that may be far removed from real-life sexual norms.

Risks

  • Desensitisation: Repeated exposure can normalise increasingly extreme or taboo sexual scenarios.
  • Legal consequences: Accessing underage content is a criminal offence, with severe penalties.
  • Impact on relationships: Escalating porn habits can erode intimacy, sexual satisfaction, and trust with real-life partners.

Getting Support

If your porn use feels compulsive, starts escalating toward extreme or illegal categories, or begins to interfere with your relationships, it’s important to seek help early. 

Speaking to a trained professional can provide guidance, set boundaries, and address underlying issues driving your behaviour.

Support is available from organisations such as:

  • Relate (relate.org.uk, tel: 0300 003 2972) – for couples and relationship counselling
  • StopSO (stopso.org.uk) – for sex addiction and compulsive sexual behaviour
  • Specialist sex addiction therapists or clinics – to manage compulsive use and its impact

Ask me and my counsellors anything

Every problem get a personal and private reply from one of my trained counsellors within one working day.

Sally Land is the Dear Deidre Agony Aunt. She achieved a distinction in the Certificate in Humanistic Integrative Counselling, has specialised in relationships and parenting. She has over 20 years of writing and editing women’s issues and general features.

Passionate about helping people find a way through their challenges, Sally is also a trustee for the charity Family Lives. Her team helps up to 90 people every week. 

Sally took over as The Sun’s Agony Aunt when Deidre Sanders retired from the The Dear Deidre column four years ago.

The Dear Deidre Team Of Therapists Also Includes:

Kate Taylor: a sex and dating writer who is also training to be a counsellor. Kate is an advisor for dating website OurTime and is the author of five self-help books.

Jane Allton: a stalwart of the Dear Deidre for over 20 years. Jane is a trained therapist, who specialises in family issues. She has completed the Basic Counselling Skills Level 1, 2, and 3. She also achieved the Counselling and Psychotherapy (CPCAB) Level 2 Certificate in Counselling Studies.

Catherine Thomas: with over two decades worth of experience Catherine has also trained as a therapist, with the same credentials as Jane. She specialises in consumer and relationship issues.

Fill out and submit our easy-to-use and confidential form and the Dear Deidre team will get back to you.

You can also send a private message on the DearDeidreOfficial Facebook page or email us at:

deardeidre@the-sun.co.uk

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‘Hamas will NEVER stop’: The hidden dangers in Trump’s Gaza ceasefire – including chilling terror threat to West

HAMAS does not believe in peace and still poses a chilling threat to the West, analysts have warned.

The terror group signed up to Trump’s peace plan which says it must disarm, but has not specifically pledged to do so – and experts have taken this as a bad omen.

Hamas militants on a car in Jabalia ahead of a hostage exchange, displaying weapons and Palestinian flags.
AFP
Hamas militants arrive before releasing an Israeli hostage to a Red Cross team in Jabalia in January 2025[/caption]
Armed Hamas fighters in camouflage uniforms and black balaclavas, one with a green headband, stand guard.
EPA
Armed Hamas fighters stand guard during the handover of three Israeli hostages[/caption]

A ceasefire officially came into force on Friday – clearing the way for the first phase of Donald Trump’s sweeping peace plan to return the hostages and demilitarise Gaza.

The US announced it would deploy up to 200 troops to Israel to help support peacekeeping efforts in Gaza.

However, signs of trouble are already brewing after a Hamas official rejected the idea of Tony Blair running the strip – one of Trump’s cornerstone measures.

Egyptian-born scholar Dalia Ziada said the much-heralded Gaza ceasefire could prove a deadly illusion.

Ziada, who defied her country’s consensus by backing Israel and was forced to flee after death threats, told The Sun: “Part of me is very happy because finally this brutal war is coming to an end.

“The hostages will be returned. The people in Gaza will be relieved from the horrors of the war.

“Hamas is obviously defeated to the point that they had to finally accept a ceasefire deal.”

But she praised Washington’s muscular return to Middle East power politics: “I am excited to see the United States coming back to the Middle East with its heavy weight and being involved on that level as a partner.”

Ziada’s optimism about a deal stops there, however – warning that the world is underestimating the nature of the enemy.

“This deal is being made with a terrorist organisation, Hamas,” she said.

“Hamas adopts the jihad ideology, violent resistance ideology. They do not believe in peace.”

Even the language, she noted, betrays Hamas’s intent.

“Actually, what they believe in is Hudna. Hudna is truce,” Ziada explained.

“It’s mainly: ‘Let’s take a break so we can rearm, regroup and come back and kill you again’.”

Hussain Abdul-Hussain, an experienced war journalist and researcher, agrees that Hamas will “absolutely not” honour disarmament.

He pointed to their reluctance throughout negotiations to relinquish weapons – and emphasised they have agreed to “freeze their activity and take a break” rather than “give this up for good”.

Abdul-Hussain believes the ceasefire will hold for a while, but not forever.

He ominously warned: “It [fighting] will come back. We just don’t know when.”

Fighters from the Qassam Brigades control a crowd as the Red Cross collects Israeli hostages in Gaza City.
AP
Fighters from the Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas[/caption]
Drone view of a Palestinian flag on a damaged building in Jabalia.
Reuters
A drone view shows a Palestinian flag on a damaged building in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip[/caption]

Ziada argues that Hamas only accepted Trump’s ceasefire plan because they ran out of options.

She said: “Actually, it’s the last card in Hamas’ hands. The last card in Hamas’ hands was hostages. And that’s why they did everything they can to avoid giving away this card.

“But now Hamas has no other option but to accept, especially after President Trump’s very clear and very direct threatening to them that in case they do not agree, there will be total obliteration.”

But the deal is being struck with “Hamas leaders in suits” in Doha, not the hardened fighters still embedded in Gaza.

That split could prove explosive.

Ziada warned: “I don’t expect that the militia on the ground will be very cooperative.

“We started to see the first sign of this lack of cooperation from the very confused reports coming out of Hamas.”

Illustration of a map detailing Trump's proposed peace deal between Israel and Hamas, including troop withdrawals, a security buffer zone, and hostage and prisoner releases.

‘Heavyweight murderers’ loose on the streets

While the remaining Hamas leaders have decided to make enough of the right noises to satisfy the peace deal conditions, they have had no contact with the prisoners who are to be released from Israeli jails.

As part of the deal, Israel will release 250 life sentence prisoners – who likely harbour a severe grudge against Israel and the West.

Richard Pater, CEO of the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM), said: “250 heavyweight murderers, Palestinian terrorists, are being released,

“They’re not being released back into the West Bank and they’ll never be allowed to enter Israel – but some of them are going to be moved to Gaza.”

Man speaking at a podium.
Yahya Sinwar, the main architect of the October 7 attacks, was released by Israel in a prisoner exchange
Militants and civilians gather as Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants keep guard while standing among rubble in Gaza City.
Rex
Palestinians gather as Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants keep guard on the day of the release of four female Israeli soldiers[/caption]

He said it is a major concern that one of the released convicts will become the new Yahya Sinwar – the terrorist mastermind of October 7.

Sinwar was himself released in a similar prisoner exchange.

Pater fears this deal is “kicking the can down the road”, because “there will be the motivation and the ability of these hardened terrorist leaders to potentially rebuild”.

‘Zero trust’

Asked whether she believed Hamas would stick to the deal, Ziada was brutally clear: “There are no guarantees. First of all, I have zero faith or zero trust in Hamas.

“One hundred per cent. I mean, zero, zero trust in Hamas.”

Even with heavyweights like Egypt, Qatar and Turkey leaning on Hamas to comply, she believes this first stage — halting fighting and releasing hostages — will be the easy part.

The rest of Trump’s 20-point peace plan will be far harder.

She said: “This is, by the way, the easiest step because this is mainly about stop the war, release the hostages, exchange prisoners. That’s it.

“The most difficult part is the other 19 points on the plan.”

Pater warned “there are 101 problems that can still occur” throughout stages two and three of the peace plan – when Hamas is supposed to disarm and the IDF eventually withdraw entirely.

President Donald Trump speaks during a cabinet meeting.
AP
President Donald Trump speaks during a cabinet meeting at the White House on Thursday[/caption]
Two women hugging in a crowd, one in a white shirt and the other with dark, curly hair.
AP
Relatives and supporters of Israeli hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip celebrate after the ceasefire announcement[/caption]

‘They will never disarm’

If anyone imagines Hamas laying down its weapons, Ziada said, they are deluding themselves.

“At this moment Hamas did not say very clearly that they will disarm,” she said.

“They will not disarm under any condition or any pressure. I cannot even picture it like Hamas going and handing their weapons because this means their end.”

Even a temporary pause in violence could serve to revive Hamas’s jihadist ambitions.

“Hamas was drained in the past month to the extent that they started to reach out to the camps of the people displaced inside Gaza and recruit teenagers,” Ziada revealed.

“This will once again revive Hamas appetite to go back to this jihadist struggle.”

And Hamas has already signalled its intent.

Ziada said: “Only days ago in the anniversary of October 7, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad issued a celebratory statement wherein they said, ‘we will continue our Jihad, we will continue our violent resistance’.”

Israeli soldiers resting near artillery units near the Gaza Strip border.
Getty
Israeli soldiers rest near artillery units near the border with the Gaza Strip[/caption]
Israeli soldier Alma Shahaf mourns at a memorial for a friend killed at the Nova festival.
Getty
Alma Shahaf, an Israeli soldier, at a memorial for a friend killed at the Nova festival[/caption]

The terror within

Ziada’s most chilling warning, however, goes far beyond Gaza.

She said the threat has now metastasised into Western societies themselves.

“People are so focused on Gaza like we are all zooming in into Gaza, but we fail to see the consequences of what the past two years has done to our world,” she said.

“The threat to the UK is coming from inside the UK. The threat to the US security is coming from inside the US.

“The attack on the West will continue — the attack on Western values and Western principles and Western way of life will continue in different forms, either by violence or even through nonviolent means as we see in political arenas.”

Abdul-Hussain reminded us that violent Islamist attacks predate October 7, and similarly warned that threat is not going away.

He said: “This is an issue that the West will have to deal with, with or without peace or ceasefire or whatever arrangement exists between Israel and the Palestinians.

And Pater insisted that the UK needs a programme of deradicalisation just as much as Gaza.

He said: “For example, the UK banning the Muslim Brotherhood movement, proscribing it as a terror organisation, not being afraid to call out Islamic extremism for what it is, will be important steps to deradicalise the population.”

A man with a white beard and head covering shouting, surrounded by a crowd of men and boys, some raising their hands.
Getty
Palestinians gathered in the city of Khan Yunis are celebrating after the ceasefire agreement in Gaza[/caption]
Palestinians turn back on Rashid Street in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, as Israeli forces attack, with the sea on the left and destroyed buildings in the background.
Getty
Palestinians turn back before advancing further as Israeli forces prevent them from crossing north through Rashid Street[/caption]

“Palestine has become the all-encompassing flag and image for this Islamist global movement. But this movement exists.

“It exists in the West and Gaza is just an extension of it.”

A fragile hope

Yet even amid the warnings, Ziada said there is reason to hope.

She said: “The tears I saw in the eyes of the hostages’ families, their excitement that their children and family members will finally be coming back from this hell… it puts a smile on my face.”

For now, she admits, the world will celebrate a pause in the bloodshed.

But her message is clear: Hamas is not finished — and the West ignores that reality at its peril.

Trump's 20-point peace plan

  • 1. Gaza will be a deradicalized terror-free zone
  • 2. Gaza will be redeveloped
  • 3. The war will immediately end
  • 4. Within 72 hours, all hostages will be returned
  • 5. Israel will release 250 dangerous prisoners plus 1700 Gazans detained after Oct 7th
  • 6. Members of Hamas who wish to leave Gaza will be provided safe passage
  • 7. Full aid will be immediately sent into the Gaza Strip
  • 8. Entry of distribution and aid in the Gaza Strip will proceed without interference
  • 9. Gaza will be governed under the temporary transitional governance of a technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee
  • 10. A Trump economic development plan to rebuild and energize Gaza will be created
  • 11. A special economic zone will be established
  • 12. No one will be forced to leave Gaza
  • 13. Hamas agrees to not have any role in the governance of Gaza
  • 14. A guarantee will be provided by regional partners to ensure that Hamas comply with obligations
  • 15. The US will work to develop a temporary International Stabilization Force in Gaza
  • 16. Israel will not occupy or annex Gaza
  • 17. If Hamas delays or rejects this proposal, Israel can proceed with invasion
  • 18. An interfaith dialogue process will be established
  • 19. Credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood can begin
  • 20. The US will establish a dialogue between Israel and the Palestinians for peaceful and prosperous co-existence

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